personal interpretations on science and QM
Coldcall said:
"I adhere to some minor subjective self-organising information theoretic interpretation, where the basic drive is self-preservation, and interactions may appear as a result of negotiating inconsistencis due to the subjective views. This view goes back to the foundations and philosophy of inductive logic and probability theory."
Thats very interesting. Would love to hear more about the "self-preservation" aspect you mention. I also have been wondering whether there can be a correlation between Darwinism and quantum mechanics. I've been trying to build a model of Darwinism which incorporates biological observership as an evolutionary driver for "better" observers. By "better" i mean better sensory development in order to observe more and more detail and defintion in the universe. What did the universe look like when the first primitive microbe self-evolved? It must have looked/felt very different to that microbe.
Hello Coldcall, I'm glad that you connect to my associations. I do not yet have any clear answers to my own questions since I'm in the process of searching, but some comments...
(1) My view on this aims to be more than only an interpretation of QM, I see it more as a constructive abstraction of the scientific method and one idea I've had for a long time is that scientific process and natural processes have a lot in common. For some time some people (ET Jaynes) argued that probability is the "logic of science", thus suggesting that science isn't about deductive reasoning (although this is what many matured theories look like when polished and formalized) but rather about inductive reasoning.
Ariel Caticha is one of those who has expressed in public his idea that the laws of physics at the deeper level might in fact share the structure of inductive reasoning. One of this set out goals is to derive general relativity from principles of inductive logic and reasoning. And that is not simply to associate information geometry and statistical manifolds with those of GR, it aims (I believe) to show that Einsteins Equation itself, follows from some kind of natural inductive logic.
Given that there are variations along these ideas, this is a main spirit I share.
So my ponderings do not only question particular theories, like QM. It questions the context in which they are born (science), and it may suggest new views to the scientific method.
(2) Not to dig too deep into what the observer is but the self-preservation I refer to is with regards to the "observer". But in my thinking, and observer is any system. It doesn't constrain itself to biologal systems. The generalisation is that the system is subject to a selective pressure to develop strategies of self-preservation. Why? A system that doesn't will simply self-desctruct, and such systems aren't stable and thus rarely observed. This is just a very simple way of trying to convey the spirit.
(3) Evolution to me, in this generalised sense have a common structure to that of biology, but goes much deeper. The suggestion of this is that also the nature of law are subject to evolution, but to explain this is more tricky. To try to give a short hint, the basic exploit is that the evolution of law and evolution of observers really go hand in hand. Perhaps one can say that law is the locally emergent optimal strategies, implemented by interacting observers. Zurek said something that I like (without me necessarily agrees with all of his quantum darwinism - I don't)...
"...what the observer knows is inseparable from what the observer is"
-- W.H Zurek, Probabilities from Entanglement, Born's Rule from Envariance
http://arxiv.org/abs/quant-ph/0405161
In this spirit, I'm working on a sort of representation formalism of information, which can have relations to other such structures. I think of it as microstructures. Such microstructures has general qualities but can also acquire internal structure as the complexity is scaled up. When doing so, actions that was previously highly unfavourable, become favourable. This is where I am at the moment, to try to figure out how this scaling generates the fundamental references, like space and time, and next also "fundamental" interactions. Here gravity takes a natural meaning in that it works in relation to complexity, and ideally it should explain why it fades when complexity is scaled down, and becomes more dominant as the complexity increases. But this is something I'm still trying to figure out.
Evolution and time evolution are treated on equal footing and just refers to different scales, the basic mechanism I picture is the same (self-preservation).
This is more philosophical and abstract than noting that the effiency of certain processes are higher when quantum strategies are used. That's just one thing one would expect to explain better. But there are more interesting suggestive connections.
/Fredrik